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The Designs of Academic Literacy: A Multiliteracies Examination of Academic Achievement

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Designs of Academic Literacy: A Multiliteracies Examination of Academic Achievement

Contributors:

By (Author) Michael Newman

ISBN:

9780897898379

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th March 2002

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Information theory
Educational psychology

Dewey:

378.199

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

200

Description

Academic achievement is always a curricular content recycling game. Using information theory in educational research, the author shows how students succeed in college, delineating the strategies they use which often differ from true learning. This qualitative multi-case study of academic literacy is the first research to assume the premises of the Multiliteracies Project of the New London Group of literacy researchers. It takes a multimodal view of literacy, not limited to reading and writing, and sets about to uncover the Design (the flexible structuring of rules and principles) that students and teachers both follow and create in college courses. This Design takes the form of a game in which students channel content from sources, such as texts and lectures, to assessments of various kinds. Students are then rewarded in the form of grades to the extent that the content they display matches the criteria the professor sets up. The students in this study had to determine which content would or would not match these criteria, which of six types of information (facts, concepts, connections, processes, principles, or metainformation, e.g., rhetorical patterns) were desired and how best to supply them. To move content from source to target they used four operations. These include exposure (making themselves conscious of the information), extraction (a process of selecting information), manipulation (changing or synthesizing information), and display (showing the information). Greater awareness of this Design led to greater success. Pedagogical implications of this model include establishing a more realistic curricula for academic literacy programs and educating professors to better match grading criteria with learning goals.

Author Bio

MICHAEL NEWMAN is Assistant Professor, Department of Linguistics and Communication Disorders, Queens College/CUNY.

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